devbox:~$ iptables -A OUTPUT -j DROP

After doing some extensive research, re-evaluating the PHP framework atmosphere, two frameworks and their respective “mini-me” counterparts seem to rule the seas.

In this post I’m simply sharing my opinion of Laravel and Symfony and their lighter-weight counterparts: Lumen and Silex. Drawing from my 15 years as a PHP developer, 10 as a professional (aka: full time employed) I am drawing from my perspective as a small business owner who does contract work and a government employee.

The winner is (for this developer): Symfony / Silex.

Let’s just start: I’m resting my laurels on Silex. (and Symfony).

As a business owner, it’s my job to choose the best balance between productivity and production for my clients. As leader of a development team, my concerns are pretty much the same, but I have to answer for more than being my own boss on the side. These are my points as to why I feel confident saying this (right now).

Quick note: Laravel is a very nice framework – if LTS was offered and there was a demonstrated history of design stability, my vote would be different.

1. Longevity.

Symfony offers LTS (long term support) for it’s versions, it’s corporation backed and has THE following of experienced developers doing their thing. This is extremely important to know, because that means the rug won’t be pulled out from under you from version to version. There’s a highly structured process in place for dealing with upgrades and notifying of BC breaks. Silex absolutely benefits from this.

Laravel on the other hand is more of a one-man show than Symfony. In my travels, I examined the version history of Laravel and Symfony, and I found that Laravel was simply too volatile for adopting into the environments that I work in. For lack of a better phrase, cutting edge in Laravel at times have clobbered those who chose to jump in with both feet at a more frequent cycle than Symfony. Lumen will have the same woes.

(Re-read that: at a more frequent cycle, PROGRESS has a cost – but there needs to be a methodical approach for enterprise environments to feel comfortable).

2. Opinionated

Lumen is easy to set up – because it’s opinionated. Opinions in my world mean you’re harder to “slip stream” into a code base refactor. Can you gut it and make it your own? Yes. But that’s just as much work as starting with something without an opinion, right?

Silex is barely opinionated. Almost no training wheels, which makes it more hostile for inexperienced developers.

That’s it!

Really, those are the things that rub me the wrong way. I think Laravel/Lumen have a lower learning curve (due to opinion) and you truly can get off the ground faster with Lumen in my opinion. However, these frameworks largely do the same thing.

This is a somewhat painful decision

I honestly like Laravel/Lumen a bit better in regards to learning them quickly. Laracasts are a true contribution to the community – not just bettering the cause of Laravel.

I think in a few years, Laravel will become the big kid on the block that it deserves to be – but right now there’s too many warning flags going off regarding API stability and decision making.

Somewhat painful?

Yes! Laravel and lumen ship with Eloquent out of the box. It uses the active record paradigm and AR can’t hold a candle to a data mapper pattern in terms of protecting yourself from your dependencies.

This really rubbed me the wrong way because it’s like giving a loaded gun to an inexperienced developer (or team). I expected a better ORM architecture for a framework for artisans.

I realize I can ignore it, and use Doctrine – but really, they should not have coupled an ORM from the get go. It’s a “crack factor” for the framework in my opinion.